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^ AMES' SERIES OF ^ 

STANDARD AND MINOR DRAMA. 

No. 267. 



ROOM 44. 



(FARCE.) 



WITH CAST OF CHARACTERS, KNTRANCKS, AND EXITS, RELATIVE POSITIONS OF 

THE PERFORMERS ON TEB STAGE, DESCRIPTION OK COSTUMES AND 

THE WHOLE OF THE STAGE BUSINESS, CAREFULLY 

MARKED FROM THE MOST APPROVED 

ACTING COPY. 



PRICE 15 CENTS. 



K 



CLYDE, OHIO: 
AMES' PUBLISHING CO. 



i^ 



No goods sent C. O. D. Payment MUST accompany all orders. 



^ ALPHABETICAL LIST OF ^ 

iiniBs' Eiiltlnn of Plays. 

• 9^(i^ ♦ 

FIFTEEN CENTS EACH UNLESS OTHERWISE MARKED. 



2 

164 

39 

43 
100 
125 

89 
113 
226 

14 
lt]0 
1(31 

(10 
152 
173 
143 
176 
162 
255 
117 
207 

52 

76 
141 

26 
191 
194 



9 

261 

46 

227 

211 

251 

163 

91 

36 

34 

229 

223 

81 

85 

83 

196 

29 

18 

10 

45 

79 

144 

67 

97 

119 

212 

92 

112 

71 

105 



DRAMAS. 

A Desperate Game 3 2 

After Ten Years 7 5 

A Life's Revenge 7 5 

Arrah de Baugh 7 5 

Aurora Floyd 7 2 

Auld Robin Gray 25c 13 8 

Beauty of Lyons 11 2 

Bill Detrick 7 3 

Brae, the Poor House Girl.... 4 4 

Brigands of Calabria 6 1 

Conn; or. Love's Victory 11 3 

Dora 5 2 

Driven to the Wall 10 3 

Driven from Home 7 4 

East Lynne 8 7 

Emigrant's Daughter 8 3 

Factory Girl 6 3 

Fielding Manor 9 6 

Gertie's Vindication 3 o 

Hal Hazard, 25c 10 3 

Heroic Dutchman of 76 8 3 

Henry Granden 11 8 

I ^ o\v He Did It 3 2 

Hidd n Treasures 4 2 

Hunter nf the Alps 9 4 

Hidden Hand 15 7 

Light* and Shadows of the 

Great Rebellion, l5c 10 5 

Lady of Lyons 12 5 

Lady Audlev's Secret 6 4 

Lost in London 6 4 

Man and Wife 12 7 

Maud's Peril _ 5 3 

Midnight Mistake 6 2 

Millie, the Quadroon 4 1 

Miriam's Crime 5 2 

Michael Erie 8 3 

Miller of Dorwent Water 5 2 

Mistletoe Bough 7 3 

Mountebanks (The) 6 2 

Old Honesty 5 2 

Old Phi 's Birthday 5 3 

Outcast's Wife 12 3 

Out on the AVoild 5 4 

Oath Bound 6 2 

Painter of Ghent 5 3 

Poacher's Doom 8 3 

Reverses 12 6 

Rock Allen 5 3 

Spy of Atlanta, 25c 14 3 

Thekla 9 4 

The False Friend 6 1 

The Fiital Blow 7 1 

The Forty-Niners 10 4 

The Dutch Rpcruit 2"c 14 3 

The Gentleman in Black 9 4 

The New MngdaTen 8 3 

The Reward of Crime 5 3 

Through Snow and Sunshine 6 4 



NO. M. F. 

7 The Vow of the Omani 7 1 

201 Ticket of Leave Man 9 3 

193 Toodles 7 2 

200 Uncle Tom's Cabin 15 7 

121 Will-o'-the-Wisp 9 4 

41 Won at Last 7 3 

192 Zion 7 4 

TEMPERANCE PLAYS. 

73 At Last 7 1 

75 Adrift 5 4 

187 Aunt Dinah's Pledge 6 3 

254 Dot; the ^liner's Daughter... 9 5 

202 Drunkard [The] 13 5 

185 Drunkar I 's Warning 6 3 

189 Drunkard's Doom 15 5 

181 Fifteen Years of a Drunk- 
ard's Life 13 4 

183 Fruits of the Wine Cup 6 3 

104 Lost > 6 2 

146 Our Awful Aunt 4 4 

53 Out in the Streets 6 4 

51 Rescued 5 3 

59 Saved 2 3 

102 Turn of the Tide 7 4 

63 Three Glasses a Day 4 2 

62 Ten Nights in a Bar-Room... 7 3 

58 Wrecked 9 3 

COMSDIES. 

168 A Pleasure Trip 7 3 

130 A Legal Holiday 5 3 

124 An Afflicted Family 7 5 

257 Caught in the Act 7 3 

248 Captured 6 4 

178 Caste 5 3 

199 Home 4 3 

174 Love's Labor Not Lost 3 3 

149 New Years in N. Y 7 6 

37 Not So Bad After All 6 5 

237 Not Such a F -ol as He Looks 6 3 

126 Our Daughters 8 6 

114 Passions 8 4 

219 Rags and Bottles 4 1 

239 Scale with Sharps and Flats.. 3 2 

221 Solon Shingle 14 2 

87 Tile Biter Bit 3 2 

249 $2,000 Reward 2 

TRAGEDIES. 

16 The Serf 6 3 

FARCES AND COMEDIETTAS. 

129 Aar-u-ag-oos 2 1 

132 Actor and Servant 1 1 

12 A Capital Match 3 2 

166 ATexan Mother-in-Law 4 6 

30 A Day Well Spent 7 5 

169 A Regular Fix 2 4 

80 Alarmingly Suspicious 4 3 

78 An Awful Criminal 3 3 



Ha 



.rfi 



PyOOM 4 4. 



AN ORIGINAL FARCE 
IN ONE ACT. 

—BY— 

/ 

Ggd. a. Slmjns. 



TO WHICH IS ADDED 

h DES'Cn/rTION OF THE COSTUMES— CAST OF THE CHARACTERS-- 

ENTRANCES AND EXITS-RELATIVE POSITIONS OP THE 

ri:RFORMERS ON THE STAGE, AND THE WHOLE 

OF THE STAGE BUSINESS. 



Et\\f.rcd according to act of Congress in the year 1889, 5> 

AMES' PUBLISHING CO. 

in the office of tlie Librarian of Congress at 'Wasliington, 



CLYDE, OHIO: 

AMES' PUBLISHING CO* 




S. !8P9 



CHABACTERS. ^ 

Landlord Of Palace Hoiel 

Jim Geeen Charadevistio Georgian 



-0- 



PROPERTIES. 

Sheet spread on floor; bed bugs; rats; pistol; table; 
chairs; bread. Sheets, rats, table and chairs to be ar- 
ranged with string, so as to be drawn off stage. 



Time of Performance— 25 minutes. 



JHP96-006793 

STAGE DIRECTIONS. 
E., means Right; l., Left; e. h.. Right Hand; l. h.. Left Hand; c, Centre: s. e.: 
I2d E.,] Second Entrance; u. e., Upper Efltrance; m. d.. Middle Door; p., the Flat 
D. P., Door in Flat; k. c, Right of Centre; l.c, Left of Centre. 

R. K. C. C. L. C. L. 

*% The reader is supposed to be upon the stage facing the audienoe. 



Room 44- 

^CENE I— Street or Wood. 

Enter, Landlord, r. 

Landlord. Well, well, well! Here I am in a terrible 
fix — the owner of a large hotel and all of my guests are 
leaving simi^ly because a man committed suicide in Boom 
44 last night. If this keeps up I'm a ruined man in a 
month, (whistling ivithoui) Hello! What's that? A 
sucker; I'll catch him! 

Enter, Jim Green, l. 

Land, {touching him on shoulder) Say, my man 

Ji7n. You say it Fll listen. 

Land. AYell; where are you going? 

Jim. See dat little yaller house down dar, painted 
green ? 

Land. Yes. 

Jim. Weil, I'se goin' down there to stop over nighn. 

{starts off, E. 

Land, {catching him hi/ arm) Hold on a moment! 
I'm the owner of a Jarge hotel- 

Jim. Who said you wasn't! (starts off 

Land, (stops him) But say — I keep rooms to let. 

Jim. Just keep on letting dem, boss. 

Land. But I'll give you board cheaper than any one 
else. 

Jim, How cheap? (mteresfed 

Land' Well, I'll give you a nice room and board for 
two dollars and a half a week. 

Jim. (starts off) I don't want to buy your hotel. 
AVhylkin get board over here to (name some hotel in 
the place) for twenty-five cents a week. 

Land. Well, Fll give you board for twenty-five cents a 
week 



4 ROOM 44. 

Jim. Will yon, boss- and a good room? 

Land. Yes; and a first-rate room. The room lias an 
even nnmber, too; so you needn't think there are spooks 
or goblins about it. 

Jim. {frigh fcncd ) What number ? 

Land. ' No. 44. 

Jim. (picking 7(2^ duds) I'm goin'l 

Land. Why? 

Jim. Why, dat's de room de man made snsansido In 
No, sir! You can't hire me ter stay in it! 

Land. Oh, that was in the Little Pala(;o hotel. Mine 
is the Big Palace hotel. 

Jim. Yes; dat was de Little Pa'aoi hotel-- dis is in 
de Big P.'dace hotel. Yes; all right, boss! I'll take you 
up. 

Land. Kight this way, then! (exd, K. 

Jim. {folloiving) Board twenty-five cents a week! 
Ha, ha, ha! ' (exit R. 

SCENE IT — Bed-room- lorv lighfs; fable; chair; nlieei 
spread, on floor for bed; candle in bottle. 

Enter, LANDLorj), ii.— followed by Jim Geeen. 

Land. Well, my man, here is your room. 

Jim. It looks to me like a hallway. 

Land. Now, here is the gas. You must be sure and 
put it out before retiring; and here is your bed — a nice 
bed of down. 

Jim. Yes; yes; way down on the ground— yes. 

Land. You must remember to put out the gas on re- 
tiring or you will be asphyxiated in the morning. 

Jim. Yes; if I don't put out the gas cm expiring, I'll 
be fixated in the morning — yes. 

Land. Now again; here is the electric button. You 
pres8 once — it calls for water; twice — it calls for water; 
and three times— it calls for stimulating beverages-. 

Jim. For what was de last? 

Land. Stimulating beverages — such as whisky. 

Jim. (makes a break for it) Let me push it thrf.e 
times, please! 

Land. Hold on! The bar is closed! 

Jim, What time does it open, please? 

Land, Four thirty! 



ROOM 4L 5 

JinL Wei], call nie about three o'clock, please! 

Land. Now, sir, as it is getting late, I will say bon 
jour. (Jim drau'S pisfol and Jnaiis around) What are 
yon looking for? 

Jim. Why, I'm lookin' fo' the squaw! 

Land. Oh, that is simply a French i)hrase meaning 
good-night. Now once more, bon jour! 

Jim. Swab-swab! (ea^z/, Landloiid, K.) Oh, yes; fine 
place this! Somewhat of an exemblance to a slaughter- 
house. Yes; he said it was a nice downy bed. I guess 
I'll ring for some bread. 

Rings — goes to bed and. sioo2:)s over fo feel it when in 
comes iJie bread by elecfricify—slriking him ivhere 
his pants hang loose— performs several antics, etc. 

— I tole you dis place exembled a slaughter-house! Well* 
I guess I'll proceed to expire, (fakes off coat and vest — 
starts to taJce off 2^<^i^-'ds, bnt hesitates ~-stop>s) Guess I 
won't take off my pants dis time. Ijast time I stopped at 
a hotel I took 'em off an' somebody stole dem an' I had to 
go home in a barrel, (gets in bed — in a moment sficJcs 
head oid from under sheet — gets up, yauming) Dog on 
it! I forgot to T^ut de light out! 

Gets up and gets pistol oid of clothes on chair; but forgets 
to put liglit out — returns to bed. Soon chair moves off 
tcith clothes — sticks oid liead and groans; but says 
nothing. Next sheet moves off—^jumj)s up and yells 
'-'Ramrod! Ramrod P' 

Enter, Landloud, ii. 

Land. What's all this racket about? 

Jim. Somebody's stole de tablecloth, and my clothes 
just went out ob be winder. I know'd if I'd a taken off 
m ypants dey'd a gone, too ! 

Land. Tablecloth nothing— that was the sheet! It 
was the consequence of an electric current passing to the 
laundry. 

Jim. My clothes go there too? 

Land. Yes ; but they will all be returned in the morn- 
ing clean as new. 

Jim. Its a good ting for my clothes, 'cause dey was 



6 BOOM 41. ; 

nearly as dirty as tlie sheet: but say, boss! 

Land. Well? 

Jim. Any danger ob dat 'ar current takin' me to de 
laundry ? 

Land. Not the least. Now go to bed! Be sure and 
blow the light out. 

tlim. Say, boss; what time did you say the bar opened? 

Land lour thirty! 

Jim. Well, wake me about two, please! 

Land. For the last time — bon jour! . {exit,B. 

Jim. Swab-swab! 1 guess I'll try it again if nobody 
cares. Hain't much bed there to try; just 'bout as downy 
as it ebber was though ! 

Lays down — in comes one rat. Jim sits up in bed; hut 
lays down again — another rat — Jim jumps up — yells 
''Eamrod! Ramrod P' 

Enter, Landlord, e. 

Land. Here ! here! What does all this mean? The 
guests are all complaining. 

Jim. Eamrod, do you furnish your ow^n beefstake to 
your boarders? 

Land. Why? 

Jim. I was just goin' to say it didn't cost you much,for 
the house is full of rats. 

T^and. (indignanUy) There's not a single rat in this 
house! 

Jim. No; I knows dey ain't — deys all married and got 
big families! 

Land. Now I want this to be distinctly understood — ■ 
that I want no more racket to-night! Go to sleep, now! 

Jim. "Go to sleep, you baby darling!" Boss, wake 
me in about an hour, please! 

Land. Goodnight! (exit, b. 

Jim. Swab-swab ! 

Goes to bed — slaps himself — raises up icith large bed- 
hug — gets pistol and shoots it off — yells, ^'Eamrod! 
BamrodP' 

Enter, Landlord, e. 

Land. Now, if I hear any more noise, I'll call a police- 
man and have you spirited away to realms unknown. 



ROOM 44 

Jim. i'se nearly dere now, boss! Bamrod— look at 
dat man-eater an' den look at mc! 

^ Land. What! All this disturbance about a poor little 
innocent bed-bug? 

Jinu If dat's one ob yer little ones, I don't want to see 
any ob yer big ones! 

Land. You go to bed now, and I don't want to h^ar 
another word from you or I'll fire you bodily! 

T-. ^^ ^ (threatenmq 

Jim. Yes; fire me bodily and solely! 
Land. Goodnight! {starts to exit 

Jim. Eamrod! 
Land. Well? 
Jim. Come here, please! 
Land. What do you want? 
Jim. Come here, if you love me. 
Land, {approaches very near) What do you want? 
Jim. Tell my folks I died happy. 
{exit, Landlord, e.) I belebe dis is de bery room whar 
dat man committed susanside. I do! soldo! soldo! 
{frightened) I— I_belebe I'll just say a little prayer 
an' then go to bed again. {kneels doion 

Now I lay me down to sleep, 
While de bed-bugs o're me creep; 
If I should die before — I — wake, 
I'tl (forgets) be a dead niggah! 

Enter, Ghost— sce?2e of fright, 

CUETAIN. 



-: Juist Out! A I>i'ama in Six Acts, by L.izzie May Elwyn, :- 
EiililBed. 



i 



SWEETBRIER 



-OR- 



The Flower Girl of New Y ork. 

ACT I — Scene I — Interior of Eogues' Eookery. Car- 
los Dare reveals the secret of Sweetbrier's parentage to his 
friend Mike — Ralph Lindsej^ — Alice discovers that her 
child is alive — Sweetbrier and her foster father — Death of 
Carlos Dare. 

ACT II — Scene I — Home of Silas Hunter — Moses 
and the letter — Mr. and Mrs. Hunter — The lost spec- 
tacles — Nancy won't be bossed by city folks — Mr. Lind- 
sey's surprise and arrest of Hendricks — Carlos Dare's con- 
fession — Nancy and Moses — Arrival of Sweetbrier — Inez 
meets an old friend — Earl discovers her secret and breaks 
their engagement — Green cucumbers. 

ACT III — Scene I-Ideas of Moses-Sweetbrier an un- 
loved wife — Hendricks threatens SAveetbrier, "Unhand me 
villain !" — Inez and Earl — Murder of Hendricks — Arrest 
of Sweetbrier-Inez declares Sweetbrier guilty — Escape of 
Sweetbrier. 

ACT IV — Scene I — Interview between Mr. Lindsey 
and Earl — Earl discovers his parentage — Inez — Uncle Si- 
las' dream— -What became of Sweetbrier ? "Was she 
drowned ?" — Discovery of papers — Carlos Dare's confes- 
sion found — Death of Lindsey — ''He has escaped the con- 
sequence of his crimes J' 

ACT V— Scene I— Pauline and Moses in New York 
selling flowers — Mr. and Mrs. Hunter in search of their 
daughter — Sweetbrier discovers Mr. Hunter — Nancy's ex- 
perience with New York hackmen, etc. — Moses meets his 
mother. Scene II — Eogues' Eookery — Sweetbrier comes 
to Mr. Hunter's rescue — Meeting of Sweetbrier and her 
mother — Arrest of Nick — Eeunion — Ee-arrest of Sweets 
brier. 

ACT VI— Scene I— Earle, as Lord Wayne, recog^ 
-nizes Sweetbrier as his wife, and the mystery is cleared 
up — Moses tells the story of their escape. 



^ ■ 1^ 

iiniEs' Plays — CDntmuEd. 



65 
31 
21 

123 

20 

175 

8 

86 

22 

84 

225 

49 

72 

19 

42 

188 

220 

148 

218 

224 

233 

154 

184 

209 

13 

66 

116 

120 

103 

50 
14) 
74 
35 
47 
95 
11 
99 
S2 
182 

nr 

228 
106 
139 
231 
235 

69 

1 

153 

23 
208 
212 

32 
186 

44 
244 

33 
246 

57 
217 
Km 

las 

2.58 



FARCES CONTINUED. 

An Unwelcome Return 3 1 

A Pet of the Public 4 2 

A Romantic Attachment 3 3 

A Thrilling Item 3 1 

A Ticket of Leave 3 2 

Betsey Baker 2 2 

Better Half 5 2 

Black vs. White 4 2 

Captain Smith 3 3 

Cheek Will Win 3 

Cupids Capers 4 4 

Der Two Surprises 1 1 

Deuce is in Him 5 1 

Did 1 Dream it 4 3 

Domesric Felicity 1 1 

Dutch Prize Fij:hter 3 

Dutchyvs. Nigger 3 

Eh? W at Did You Say 3 1 

Everybody Astonished 4 

Fooling with the Wrong Man 2 1 

Freezing a Mother-in-Law... 2 1 

Fun in a Post Ullice 4 2 

Family Discipline 1 

Groose with the Golden Eggs.. 6 3 

Give Me xMv Wife 3 3 

Hans the Dutch J. P 3 1 

Hush 4 2 

H. M.S. Plum 1 1 

How Sister Paxey got her 

Child B iptiz d 2 1 

How She has Own Way 1 3 

How He Popped the Quest'n. 1 1 

How t . Tame xM-in-Ltiw 4 2 

How Stout Vour Getting 5 2 

III the Wrong Box 3 

In the Wrong Clothes 5 3 

John Smith 5 3 

Juinbo Jnm 4 3 

Killn; T lue 1 1 

Kittie' Wedding Cake 1 3 

Lick Skillet Wedding 2 2 

Lauderbach's Little Surprise 3 

Lodgings for Two 3 

Matrimonial Bliss 1 1 

Match tor a Mother-in-Law.. 2 2 

More Blunders than one 4 3 

M<.ther's Fool 6 1 

Mr. and Mrs. Pringle 7 4 

Mr. Hudson's Tiger Hunt 1 1 

My Heart's in Highlands 4 3 

^ y Prccous Betsey 4 4 

My Turn Next 4 3 

M Wife's Relations 4 4 

My Day and Now-a-Days 1 

Obedience 1 2 

Od Clothes 3 

On the Sly 3 2 

Ot! ello 4 1 

Paddy Miles' Boy 5 2 

P:iten' Washing Machine 4 1 

Persecuted Dutchman 6 3 

Poor Pilicody 2 3 

Prof. Bones 'Latest Invention 5 



NO. M r. 

159 Quiet Family 4 4 

171 Rough Diamond 4 3 

180 Ripples 2 

48 Schiaps 1 1 

i;^ Sewing Circle of P riod 6 

115 S. H. A. M. Pinafore 3 3 

55 Somebody's Nobody 3 2 

245 Sports on a Lark 3 

232 Stage Struck Yankee 4 2 

2o8 Strawberry Shortcake 2 

137 Taking the Census 1 1 

40 Thit Mysterious B'dle 2 2 

245 Ticket Taker 3 

38 Tiie Bewitched Closet 5 2 

131 The Cigarette 4 2 

10] The Coming Man 3 1 

167 Turn H.m Out 3 2 

68 Tlie Sham Prof ssor 4 

54 TheTwoT. J's 4 2 

2.3 'Ihe BcstCUiro 4 1 

28 Ihiriy-three Next Birthday.. 4 2 

142 Tit tor Tat 2 1 

213 Vermont Wool Dealer 5 3 

151 Wanted a Hus'i.nd 2 1 

5 When Wosnen Weep 3 2 

56 Wooing Under Difficultic 5 3 

70 Which will he iMarry 2 8 

135 Widowe 's Tii.ls 4 5 

147 WakrgHimUi. 1 2 

155 Why they Joined thj Re- 
becca- 4 

111 Yankee Duelist 3 1 

157 Ya kee Peddler 7 3 

ETHIOPIAN FARCES. 

204 Academy of Stars 6 

15 An Unhappy Pair 1 1 

172 Black Shoemaker 4 2 

98 Black Statue 4 2 

222 Colored Senators 3 

214 Chops 3 

145 Cuff's Luck 2 1 

190 Crimps Tr p 5 

249 Double Electi n 9 1 

27 Fetter Lane to iiravesend 2 

230 Hainlet the Dainty.. 6 1 

153 Hiiuiited House 2 

24 Handy Andy 2 

236 llypochomlriac The 2 

247 Inconipatioilitv ot Temper... 1 2 

77 Joe's Vis t 2 1 

88 Mischievous Ni^iger 4 2 

256 Midnight CmIic 2 1 

128 Musical Darkey 2 

259 Nobody's Moke 5 2 

90 NoCureX' P.iy 3 1 

61 NotiisDi-ii :.s lleSeCMis 3 

234 Old D:id's Cabin 2 1 

1.50 OldPompcv 1 1 

109 Other Pc< pie's Children 3 2 

1.34 Pomp's Piiinks 2 

177 Quarrel ome Servants 3 

96 Rooms to Let 2 1 

107 School 5 



^^ 



.rfi 




NO. M. F. 

ETHIOPIAN FARCES-CONT'UED. 



133 Seeing Bosting 

179 Sham Doctor 

94 16,000 Years Ago., 



...3 
.. 3 



26 Sport with a Sportsman 2 

92 Stage Struck Darkey 2 

241 Struck by Lightning 2 

10 Stocks Up, Stocks Down 2 

64 That Boy Sam 3 

252 That Awful Carpet Bag 3 

122 The Select School.. 5 

118 The Popcorn Man 3 

6 Tlie Studio 3 

108 Those Awful Boys 5 

4 Twain's Dodging 3 

197 Tricks .T. 5 

198 Uncle Jetf - 5 

170 U. S. Mail 2 

216 Vice Versa 3 



,...3 

1 

2 

1 
3 

1 



1 



015 910 017 



206 
210 
203 
20o 
156 



17 
130 



215 
250 
260 



Viilkens and Dinah 4 1 

Virginia iMummy 6 1 

Who Stole the Chickens 1 1 

William Tell 4 

Wig-Maker and His Servants 3 

GUIDE BOOKS. 

Hints on Elocution 

Hints to Amateurs 

CANTATA. 

On to Victory ^ 

TABLEAUX. 

Festival of Days 

PANTOMIME. 
Cousin John's Album... 



4 6 



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PREPARED WOOL, 

FEE P ABED WOOL IS AN ARTICLE THAT E VEIl Y ONE, 

WITHOUT ANY EXPERIENCE, CAN 

MAKE INTO 

WIGS! 

BEARDS! 

MUSTACHES ! 

ETC., ETC. 

AT VERY LITTLE COST, AND WILL BE SURE TO 
G I VE SA TISFA C TION. 

-^^Mt PRICE 50 CENTS PER OUNCE. 1^-^.^ 

Address, 

AMES' PUBLISHING CO., 

LOCK BOX 153. CLYDE, OHIO 

rh rG 



